Latch operating means



July 6, 1954 F. .1. RUSSELL ETAL LATCH OPERATING MEANS 6 Sheets-Sheet 1 Filed Sept. 1, 1950 ,w 2 m0 w 0 0 E0 e 3 k INVENTORS. Fuse/v52, BEEf/LER, 14 0225: and Hsez/e Arman/5Y5.

y 1954 F; J. RUSSELL ET AL ,683,053

LATCH OPERATING MEANS Filed Sept. 1, -1950 6 Sheets-Sheet 2 am mi 1/0 E 950 rZRussELL,

/ RAYMOND. mD/ETQ/Chf,

INVENTORS.

JGUEBMEQ, BEE/{52, %QEEZ, Baez/e awe CALDWELL, By flrroeMe-ys.

July 6, 1954 F. J. RUSSELL ET AL 2,683,053

LATCH OPERATING MEANS Filed Sept. 1, 1950 e Sheets-Sheet s RA YMO/VD WI .D/E 7-2/0,

- I N V EN TORS I A 5 W HEB/V52, EEHZ. ER, OGQEL and Hse'zxe 55 By A 7- ro e/vzys.

July 6, 1954 F. J. RUSSELL ET AL' LATCH OPERATING MEANS G Sheets-Sheet 4 Filed Sept. 1, 1950 10 .d 0 IR. K). p. 5 mm? 1 4 s N H Q m a J E E RD E 9 J W. H a M, aw 9 3 l 3 3 6 fl w w m y g pm w a p. n. m.) The ma F.. a 2 .w R /& M r W W fi "H Wm 1 I J J 0 j n M/ f 4 o f 0 J 3 Ar 8 a Q I fl. a fl ,i 0 6 \Illlllll/ July 6, 1954 F. J. RUSSELL LATCH OPERATING Filed Sept. 1, 1950 ET AL 2,683,053

MEANS 6 Sheets-Sheet 5 I II 0? nn-n"...

7%? 14 12; 152 jgi zz 5 520 July 6, 1954 F. .1. RUSSELL ET AL LATCH OPERATING MEANS 6 Sheets-Sheet 6 Filed Sept. 1, 1950 I250 "cl: RUSSELL, RAYMOND W." .D/ETQ/C INVENTORS. HUEENEE, BEEHLEQ,

T469251. ana HEQz/s,

By AQTTOQNEY-S.

Patented July 6, 1954 UNITED STA ram OFFICE LATCH ()PERATING MEANS Fred J. Russell, Beverly Hills, and Raymond W. Dietrich, Bell, Calif.

This invention relates to a screen door lock.

Special conditions arising from screen door design and installation require certain limitations in looking devices for the same. The door is thin, and a soft bolt action is desirable. Ordinarily there will be a short back set, that is to say a short measurement from the edge of the door to the center of the spindle. There is commonly a very small space between the screen door and the main door, all of which necessitates a relatively miniature mechanism. In reducing conventional devices for screen door use many disadvantages are encountered.

It is an object of the present invention to provide a novel lock particularly suitable for the dimensional and space limitations imposed in screen door installation.

More particularly, an object of the invention is to provide a novel lock wherein the spindle which retracts the latch is axially shiftable to accomplish locking and unlocking, whereby when in one axial position the spindle is held against rotation by engagement with a fixed internal member, and when in another axial position a relief groove in the spindle registers with such fixed member but free of locking engagement K latch assembly, and the relatively larger crosscore area is utilized for the primary control mechanism whereby parts of sufiicient size may be employed to secure greater leverage and smoother operation.

These and other objects and advantages of the invention will become further apparent from a consideration of the description taken in conjunction with the drawings.

In the drawings:

Figure 1 is a horizontal sectional view of the lock installed in a screen door.

Figure 2 is a sectional view taken on the line 22 of Figure 1.

Figure 3 is a vertical sectional view taken on the line 3.'i of Figure 2.

Figure t is a vertical sectional View taken on the line 1-4 of Figure 2.

Figure 5 is a fragmentary vertical view partly in section as taken on the line 55 of Figure 2.

Figure 6 is a fragmentary section of mecha- 2 nism seen at the right-hand portion of Figure 1 with the inside handle shifted to lock the door.

Figure 7 is a fragmentary vertical section taken on the line 'i-? of Figure 6.

Figure 8 is an exploded perspective view of the latch bolt assembly employed inthe lock.

Figure 9 is an exploded View illustrating all of the parts of the lock except the latch bolt assembly.

Figure 10 is a horizontal sectional View of an alternative form of lock installed in a screen door.

Figure 11 is a sectional view taken on the line lll! of Figure 10.

F gure 12 is a vertical sectional view taken on the line i2|2 of Figure 11.

Figure 13 is a fragmentary vertical sectional view taken on the same line as Figure 12 showing certain of the parts in a difierent operative position.

Figure 14 is a fragmentary sectional view taken on the same line as Figure 11 showing some of the parts in a different operative position.

Figure 15 is a vertical sectional View taken on the line !5l5 of Figure 11.

Figure 16 is an exploded perspective view illustrating all of the parts of the alternative form of lock.

The primary function of the lock is to enable the latch bolt thereof to be retracted by turning either the outer knob or the inner handle when the lock is in unlocked condition, but to conveniently put the lock in locked condition by a slight shift of the inner handle and thereby prevent the outer knob from being rotated and as a result prevent the latch from being retracted. As an incident to the locking function due to the construction of the lock, the inner handle cannot be turned when the device is locked.

The illustrated form of the device comprises an outer operating assembly l5, shown by way of example as embodying a knob 16, a rose ii and a mounting plate Hi. It comprises further an inner handle assembly 20 embodying in general a handle 2|, an inner rose 22 and a mounting plate 23.

Extending between the outer operating assembly and the inner handle assembly is a spindle 25 which is operatively associated with a locking mechanism generally designated 26, the latter in turn being operatively connected with a latch bolt assembly 27.

Mounting posts are fixed to the mounting plate 18 and are internally threaded to receive machine screws 3! which extend through suitable holes 32 and 33 in the rose 22 and mounting plate 23. This arrangement for mounting enables the lock to be installed on doors of various thicknesses without adjustment. It will be noted that the spindle 25 extends into a socket 34 in the outer operating assembly in a manner to per mit considerable latitude of relative positioning along the common axis.

The spindle 25 is non-circular, being preferably square, and the socket 34 is complementary to the spindle. Consequently rotation of the outer operating assembly will rotate the spindle if the spindle is free to rotate, and if it is held against rotation the knob it cannot be turned.

The spindle is formed with a circumferential groove 35 which has a relationship to the locking mechanism 26 which latter includes a fixed looking plate 38 to be later described in detail. This locking plate 36 is provided with holes 3? through which the screws 3! pass, and is formed with a circumferential flange 38 which seats against the inside surface of the door.

Utilizing the plate 35 as a case, the locking mechanism 2% forms a sub-combination thereon which will subsequently be described.

Generally speaking, when the spindle 25, which is axially slidable, is in one position, the spindle groove located so that the locking mechanism 528 permits the spindle to rotate, but when the spindle is axially shifted so that the groove 35 is in another position, the squared portion of the spindle comes into locking engagement with the locking mechanism and the spindle is thereby held against rotation.

The inner handle assembly is utilized as the normal means for axially shifting the spindle to a locking position and releasing it for spring return to unlocked position. This assembly comprises a sleeve 60, which is rotatably anchored within the rose and mounting plate 23. This relationship is accomplished by employing a washer ll disposed against an annular shoulder $2 on the sleeve, and a hollow cap 43 at the outer end of the sleeve having a shoulder 44 engageable with the outer end of the rose 22. Suificient longitudinal play is provided for the sleeve to have free rotation within the mounting plate. The sleeve has a square bore 45 complementary to the squared portion of the spindle, whereby rotation of the sleeve will impart rotation to the spindle. Such rotation can be imparted by turn ing the handle 2i which extends diametrically through the sleeve All, being accommodated in holes 46 and 45' in the sleeve and cap.

The handle is illustrated in two parts 58 and which can be threaded together, the part 50 having a diameter which can be inserted through the holes ll": and 45 but with a head 52 of large enough diameter to prevent the handle from being pulled entirely through these holes. In actual manufacture the threaded assembly arrangement will be dispensed with in favor of a handle assembly which cannot be manually disconnected.

The handle is formed with an annular groove 55 in which can nest a ball 56. This ball also engages a socket 51 in a head 58 formed on the inner end of the spindle. A compression spring 59 is interposed between the end of the sleeve 40 and the spindle head 58, the spring normally urging the spindle inwardly. This inner position in the form of device illustrated is the unlocked position. (See Figure 1.)

To shift the spindle outwardly into locked position, the handle 25 may be moved axially into the position illustrated in Figure 6. As the groove 55 of the handle moves away from the ball 56,

the surface of the handle functions like a cam to force the ball 55 away from the handle and imparting longitudinal movement to the spindle 25 against resistance of the spring es. It is obvious that the longitudinal shifting of the spindle could be accomplished through mechanical means other than the specific form illustrated, as for example the handle 2| might be provided with a type of cam which would func tion upon an axial rotation rather than axial shifting of the handle.

The latch bolt assembly ill is more or less conventional and will be briefly described so that the function of the locking mechanism is more readily understood. This latch bolt assembly comprises a bolt 66 extending from which is a slotted T element iii. The bolt is slidable within the tubular housing 52, and when the parts are assembled the head 53 of the T is outside of the housing 62, being slidable through a slot 64 in the end of the housing. A guide member 65 is disposed in the housing, and the slotted extension of this guide member also extends through the slot o l in the housing. Slots ill and S5 in the T element GI and the guide member are provided to receive an actuating element of the look mechanism, as later described. A compression spring 55 is seated in the housing 62 to normally urge the bolt til outwardly. Retraction of the bolt is accomplished by pulling inwardly on the T member 6 l.

Having in mind that one purpose of the locking mechanism 25 is to translate rotation of the spindle when in unlocked condition into a mechanical action which will retract the latch bolt Eli, and another purpose is to establish a locked condition so that the spindle cannot be rotated and the latch bolt consequently cannot be retracted, the lock mechanism will next be described.

A relatively thin and approximately flat annu lar housing is formed by cooperation of the looking plate 36, a disc '19 to fit on the inside, which is preferably recessed as shown, and a cover H to fit against the outside. The disc Hi and the cover ii are retained in fixed relation to the plate 38 by machine screws 12 threaded through holes l3, l3 and '13". Moreover, the disc ill and cover H are provided with holes, not numbered, which obviously register with the holes 3? in the plate 36 and through which the mounting machine screws 3i extend. The housing is consequently non-rotatably held between the outer and inner mounting plates within the roses.

The cover ll is formed with a plane surface recess 76 in which is slidably positioned a bifurcated slide member ll. This bifurcated member has arms 78 and 19 extending laterally from which are ears 8!) and 8 l. The latter are adapted to engage with the head 63 of the latch assembly T 6!, so that when the slide member is shifted laterally in the recess E6 in the righthand direction as viewed in Figure 3, it will retract the latch bolt 55 against the resistance of the spring 66.

The slide member Tl is normally urged outwardly (laterally in the left-hand direction as viewed in Figure 3) by springs 85 and 86. These springs are nested partly in grooves QT and 88 formed in the disc l0 and partly in slots 89 and 90 cut in the plate 36. One end of the springs 85 and 85 seats against the corresponding ends of the slots 89 and 9D, and the opposite end of the springs bears against small tabs 9! and 92 shown is provided with a square bore I45 complementary to the square portion of the spindle whereby rotation of the sleeve will impart rotation to the spindle. This rotation can be effected by turning the handle lZl which extends diametrically through the sleeve I40, being accommodated in holes I46 and ME in the sleeve and cap.

A one-piece handle is employed which is formed with a reduced neck lfit flattened on one side at llii. The spindle is provided at its end adjacent the handle with a combined spring retainer and head I52 which bears against the reduced portion of the handle thereby preventing th handle from being pulled out of the sleeve and cap assembly. In addition there is a stop pin 33, the primary purpose of which is to limit the rotation of the handle, but this pin also serves the secondary function of preventing retraction of the handle from the sleeve and cap. In order to insert the stop pin l53 when as sembling the lock the end of the cap I53 is left open and is subsequently closed by an end cap ltd which is pressed into place as shown.

A compression spring l!) is mounted in the sleeve His bearing at one end against the spindle seat 52 and at the other end against the washer Hit, the spring normally holding the spindle against the handle 229. When the handle is turned so that the flat face l5l meets the spindle head I52, which may be considered to be an inner position of the spindle, the spindle is in unlocked position.

To shift the spindle outwardly into locked position the handle lil may be rotated on its own axis which effects a cam action by bringing the rounded portion of the neck L50 into engagement with the spindle head i232 thereby shifting the spindle l25 away from the handle and thus imparting longitudinal movement to the spindle lit against resistance of the spring l59.

The latch bolt assembly I2? is more or less conventional and will be briefly described so that the function of the lock mechanism I26 is more readily understood. This latch bolt assembly comprises a bolt ltd. Extending from it is a slotted element ltl. The bolt is slidable within the tubular housing H52 and when the parts are assembled the slotted element is outside of the housing 562 being slidable through a slot l64 in the end of the housing. A tab lE5 is formed from the end wall of the housing I62. A slot liil in the element lfil is provided to receive an actuating element of the lock mechanism, as later described. A compression spring His is seated in the housing IE2 to normally urge the bolt its outwardly. Retraction of the bolt is accomplished by pulling inwardly the slotted member llil.

The lock mechanism l25 consists of a channel shaped slide l'lll mounted within an outer channel housing ll 9, which in turn is mounted on the plate The housing Ill has tabs l'l2 which extend through slots l'lli of the plate I36 and are bent over. The housing I?! has a pin 914 which engages the tab I65 of the latch housing H32.

Centrally located is a non-circular hole I which is complementary in shape to the spindle I25. Slide l'lii has a pin l'lB which extends through a slot ll? of the housing Ill and engages the slot lSl of the latch bolt assembly. The slide l'lll is urged outwardly by a spring I18 which is held between a lug l'ill extending from the slide ll'li and tab ill!) of the plate l36. The spring urges inwardly extending tabs l8l of the slide l'lll against the faces I82 of the flange Ml of the sleeve I42. Upon the rotation of the sleeve l4l, the faces l82 bear against one or the other of the tabs l8l, thus sliding the member l'lfi inwardly. The pin l'lli attached to this member will pull the latch ISB inwardly with it. The slot lfil is elongated so that upon normal closure of a door the latch l6?) may slide inwardly without movement of pin lit and its related parts.

While we have herein shown and described our invention in what we have conceived to be the most practical and preferred embodiment, it is recognized that departures may be made therefrom within the scope of our invention, which is not to be limited to the details disclosed herein but is to be accorded the full scope of the claims so as to embrace any and all equivalent devices.

Having described our invention, what we claim as new and desire to secure by Letters Patent is:

1. In a device adapted to operate a latch bolt mechanism, an operating assembly, a spindle non rotatably keyed to said operating assembly, said spindle being axially movable with respect to said operating assembly between locked and unlocked positions, a latch bolt actuating hand hold on said operating assembly movable relative to the axis of the spindle respectively to locked and unlocked positions of adjustment, said hand hold having a portion thereof movable from a first position out of axially shifting engagement with the spindle to a position in axially shifting engagement with the spindle whereby to slide said spindle into one of said spindle positions, and means adapted to return said spindle to the other position upon return of said hand hold to said first position.

2. In a device adapted to operate a latch bolt mechanism, an operating assembly, a spindle non-rotatably keyed to said assembly and axially slidable relative thereto into a locking position and an unlocking position, a member having a non-rotatably fixed position in the device, said spindle being adapted to engage said member in locked position and being thereby restrained from rotating and being disengaged from said member in unlocked position and thereby free to rotate, a hand hold on said operating assembly transversely slidable relative to the axis of the spindle respectively to locked and unlocked positions of adjustment, said hand hold having a portion thereof movable endwise from one position to another position against the spindle in one of said positions of adjustment whereby to slide said spindle into one of said spindle positions, and return. means operable between a stationary portion of the device and the spindle adapted to return said spindle to the other position upon return of said hand hold to said one position.

3. In a device adapted to operate a latch bolt mechanism, an operating assembly, a spindle non-rotatably keyed to said operating assembly and axially slidable relative thereto into a locking position and an unlocking position, a member having a non-rotatably fixed position in the device, said spindle being adapted to engage said member in locked position and being thereby restrained from rotating and being disengaged from said member in unlocked position and thereby free to rotate, a hand held on said operating assembly transversely slidable in the assembly respectively to locked and unlocked positions of adjustment, said hand hold having a cam way facing in both transverse directions and a cam on said spindle adapted to engage said cam way, said cam way being movable endwise to a position against the cam in one of said positions of adjustment whereby to slide the spindle into one of said spindle positions, and return means acting against the spindle adapted to return said spindle to the other position upon return of said hand hold to the other of said positions of adjustment.

4. In a device adapted to operate a latch bolt mechanism, an operating assembly, a spindle non-rotatably keyed to said assembly and axially slidable relative thereto into a locking position and an unlocking position, a member having a non-rotatably fixed position in the device, said spindle being adapted to engage said member in locked position and being thereby restrained from rotating and being disengaged from said member in unlocked position and thereby free to rotate, a hand hold on said operating assembly rotatable relative to the axis of the spindle respectively to locked and unlocked positions of adjustment, said hand hold having a circumferentially eccentric cam way, and a cam on the spindle adapted to engage said cam way, said hand hold being rotatable from one position out of engagement against the spindle to another position against the spindle in one of said positions of adjustment whereby to slide the spindle into one of said spindle positions, and return means acting against the spindle adapted to return said spindle to the other po- I0 sition upon return of said hand hold to said one position.

5. In a device adapted to operate a latch bolt mechanism, an operating assembly, a spindle non-rotatably keyed to said operating assembly, said spindle being axially slidable relative to said assembly into a locking position and an unlocking position, a non-rotating member, said spindle when in looking position engaging said member and being thereby prevented from rotating and when in unlocking position being free from restraint by said member and consequently rotatable, manually operable means adapted to slide said spindle comprising a handle on the operating assembly mounted transversely of the axis of the spindle, and a cam surface on the handle adapted to be moved by the handle into endwise engagement with the spindle thereby to slide the spindle to one of said positions, and means operable against the spindle adapted to return the spindle to the other position upon movement of said cam surface out of engagement with the spindle.

References Cited in the file of this patent UNITED STATES PATENTS Number Name Date 2,497,750 Wardwell Feb. 14, 1950 FOREIGN PATENTS Number Country Date 7,045 Great Britain Apr. 5, 1893 

